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#132500 by TheCaptain
Tue Dec 07, 2010 1:29 am
Well lads, after spending time researching, selling my highland pipes to buy it, and being convinced within myself I'd be happy with it, I'm afraid I may be parting with my BOSS GT-8

Hard to explain it all, but I think it comes down to: "it just isn't as easy as my last effects pedal to get what I want quickly"

The thing is capable of much: maybe too much..
I think I'll sell it and perhaps either find another of what I had before, or try stomp boxes like the old days..

Maybe I'm just getting old to fiddle with so many options...


:?

#132501 by gbheil
Tue Dec 07, 2010 1:39 am
We are never totally satisfied are we Rich.
Sometimes the wanting, and thinking about what is possible is the best part of a purchase. Then the reality has to go n screw it up.
Mayhaps that is why I am so happy just playing through my amp.
Simple yet satisfying.

#132544 by TheCaptain
Tue Dec 07, 2010 12:43 pm
yeah, it's funny you say that, cause my brother was in town, and we were messing around and he plugged in straight into the fender amp, and I'm like man, that tone sounds really nice....

:O

#132547 by Stringdancer
Tue Dec 07, 2010 1:26 pm
Maybe I'm just getting old to fiddle with so many options...



No old has nothing to do with it, young musician get overwhelmed as well, these gadgets manufactors mistakenly think that more is better with no consideretaion to the fact that their 'more" takes away from real job of the musicians and that is making music not reading endeless gadgets manuals.

I'd say get rid of it and go back to make music.

#132551 by Slacker G
Tue Dec 07, 2010 1:50 pm
I bought a G2.1u and loved it so much I bought a spare. Then I bought a G2 from Sweetwater for $89.00 so I would have one to carry around when I ride in the summer. They operate 8 hours on a set of AA cells, have headphone out and a built in drum machine so practice in the park is less boring. It is the same unit as the G2.1u without the swell pedal. I love it so much I bought a back up for it also. I use them for all my recording also. Great way to get into a DAW.

Noise level is 120db down, and the FX are sampled at 24/96. They're easiest FX pedal to program unit I ever saw or had. And the fastest switching unit on the market. They have a lot of neat sounds and distortions, although I don't use the distortions. A lot of FX for the price of a dinner in New York.

No. I don't sell them, but almost every picker who has heard mine has gone out and bought one.

#132554 by dizzizz
Tue Dec 07, 2010 3:25 pm
I've got the G1x, the generation before Slacker's G2.1u, and it's pretty great too. The only major problem I've found with it is the volume tends to get erratic when the batteries get low, so you gotta make sure it's always full up.

#132565 by TheCaptain
Tue Dec 07, 2010 8:17 pm
ah cool stuff lads.

ya know as well, sort embarrassing as it is to say it, I think I would actually consider going back to what I had before the Gt-8
And that is a ZOOM 2020 from like 19xx...

or, even better it's bigger brother the 4040, which has the added feature which I always lamented the 2020 didn;t have: bank up AND down: plus foot pedals.

I waffled on going with a 4040 before I got the BOSS GT-8, and now that I've actually had my mits into the GT-8, I wish I had gone the 4040 route.
But honestly, without having tried a GT-8, I just had no idea what exactly I was getting into.

Luckily, I don't think I'll really lose any money in the process.

I look forward to as Nav4 c doode says, "getting back to making music"

#132568 by Sir Jamsalot
Tue Dec 07, 2010 8:44 pm
I hear ya on this. Music equipment is a huge investment - it's not really as easy as just trying everything out - you could go to guitar center and sit next to a few 11 year olds pumping up the volume next to you while scratching at the strings, and hopefully feel relaxed enough to call that an adequate amp-test, but really what I've found is that unless you take the amp home and play it when you're relaxed in a quiet room, there's no good way to test out what tones you like.

I've scoured the internet for reviews on amps, pedals, sample sounds, opinions, ... for every 10 that give an amp a 10 star rating, there's 2 or 3 who give the same amp a 2 because it doesn't meet their expectation - and you're left with that feeling of "well, if that many people like it, it must be a good tone", but you're always conflicted because there's the possibility that the 2 low ratings might actually be right. I found the whole process somewhat intimidating, especially when you're about to make a 1K investment, like I just did. Experience is the only the true factor for satisfaction, and unless you have a lot of friends with amps you can borrow, its gonna be a long road.

I decided for myself that I was going to aim for two distinct tones (3 if you count clean). A heavy blues tone, like Jimi Hendrix style gain, and a metal tone. Because no one in my family who would want to hear that kind of music, I opted to leave that tone for direct recording - I purchased a BOSS ME-70, and I rely on some computer plugins. For the Blues tones, I wanted a real tube amp, so I bit the bullet (and I"m still not sure I made the right choice, but what is done is done) and purchased a combo amp - the Peavey Classic 50 212. That way I could at least play at small parties, the kind of music that the family could at least bear :) and should I desire to pull some metallica out, I can always route my ME-70 thru the peavey for the metal gain, so effectively I can get both tones I'm looking for.

But all that said, I had to invest in two expenses - totalling about 1,200 USD when all is said and done.

The BOSS ME 70, unlike the GT-8 and or GT-10 doesn't require a pilots license - also something I was hoping to avoid - it has lots of knobs - physical things you actually turn! the user's manual is like 5 pages long (counting only the English version!), so it's not too intimidating.

Long story short, I know what you mean on getting the tone you want front. Unless you're able to experience it first hand in the type of music you want to play, the reviews you can read don't usually lend themselves well to what you're trying to get tone-wise, so reviews are difficult to trust, and going to GC to test the equipment is not easy (at least for me), so making an investment and hoping for the best, or willing to take it back or sell for another item is probably the most bang for the buck way about getting what you ultimately want.

just my 2 cents.

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